Many good players have been forced to learn the off hand due to injury. Learning new shots is a good thing. Even if you go back to your dominant hand you never know when you will find yourself leaning out of a bush and need the off hand.

Mark Ellis wrote:Many good players have been forced to learn the off hand due to injury. Learning new shots is a good thing. Even if you go back to your dominant hand you never know when you will find yourself leaning out of a bush and need the off hand.

yes we are talking about disc golf. played 11 holes today with a stratus and a sonic. putting was the hardest part. i even managed to get a par and putt an x step on a couple bh drives. fh felt like the most akward thing i have ever done.

I'm a lefty and think we've always had an advantage using our offhands, but learning to use an offhand isn't terribly difficult. My started throwing a right handed hammer after a shoulder injury and now it's more accurate than my left handed one. It's really nice to have an unexpected throw up my sleeve in Ultimate. It's also useful to have one more line open to me in disc golf. Supposedly a righty hammer and lefty thumber are more or less the same, but I think the hammer grip gives me a lot more control over the disc than I have with the thumber. I make some effort to work on all my offhand throws, because I want to have a wider range of options. Never know when I might need something tricky.

Mark Ellis wrote:Many good players have been forced to learn the off hand due to injury. Learning new shots is a good thing. Even if you go back to your dominant hand you never know when you will find yourself leaning out of a bush and need the off hand.

I played a DoD course last year during the winter for sh!ts and grins and managed to shoot 2 down, I putted left handed too. Talk about training your brain, I really had to think about it and reverse everything. I didn't throw any FHs or OHs though, just BH.

I do agree with those before me, it is nice to have more lines or options open up to you when you're in the sh!t or otherwise.